Category: apologetics
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Following materialism to its logical end ultimately leads to nihilism where everything is meaningless. This is why most materialists cannot and do not live consistently within their worldview, but illegitimately borrow transcendent values (like moral goodness) from Christianity. But for the few that are willing to venture to the logical…
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Al Mohler has a disturbing expose here on Canada’s “rapid descent into the embrace of death” through euthanasia. What Canada calls “Medical Assistance in Dying” now accounts for an astounding one out of every twenty deaths in the nation. Mohler gets to the heart of the issue when he writes,…
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C.T. Studd, born on December 2, 1860, was a British cricketer who became a prominent missionary, dedicating his life to spreading the Christianity in China, India, and Africa after renouncing his wealth and sports career. He died on July 16, 1931. He is well known for saying this: “I pray…
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God gives evidence of his existence to everyone (Ps 19:1; Acts 14:17; Rom 1:18-20). However, many choose to willfully suppress their knowledge of the existence of God (Rom 1:18-23). Classical apologetics can unmask this willful suppression of the knowledge of God. Classical apologetics seeks to prove the existence of God…
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+ Cause, Classical Apologetics, Cosmological Argument, Effect, kalam, Second Law of Thermodynamics, Universe+
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Camus is famous for espousing that “Nothing Is True, Everything Is Permitted”, echoing the nihilistic worldview of Nietzsche. This is the perspective at the heart of paganism – the belief that nothing is true (it’s all relative) and everything is permitted. In his milemarker book “Pagan America, The Decline of…
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Marcus Tullius Cicero was not a Christian; he lived from 106 BC to 43 BC, long before Christianity emerged. He was a Roman statesman, lawyer, philosopher, and orator who adhered to the religious and philosophical beliefs of ancient, pagan Rome. He is famous for characterizing religion as either “nothing at…
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“An Examination of the Testimony of the Four Evangelists” by Simon Greenleaf is a legal treatise written in the mid-19th century. Published in 1847, this work aims to investigate the reliability of the Gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John through the lens of legal evidence principles as applied in…
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Al Mohler wrestles here with the ethics of the use of nuclear weapons on Hiroshima and Nagasaki during WW2, appealing to Just War theory. He concludes, “I believe the dropping of the bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki was justified, in so far as the use of nuclear weapons can ever…

